Solved by verified expert:Based on your readings, would you or would you not consider Franklin a spiritual descendant of the Puritans? Explain your answer in detail and use specific examples from the text. Remember: to cite and reference any sources that you may use, including the primary text itself. Use MLA formatting and standards.All the readings are linked below. you will shape all of your posts by following this Paragraph Plan!! ( Specific requirements in the attached file)Read Franklin, Autobiographyhttp://www.gutenberg.org/files/148/148-h/148-h.htmor/and listen The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklinyou should Google ‘Benjamin Franklin’ and the ‘American Enlightenment.’To begin, you might want to select key quotes that you found interesting while reading. Once you get those quotes in place, complete the paragraph plan by filling out your main idea (also known as topic sentence) and then, your analysis. Once you have your body paragraphs in place (2-3), examine those paragraphs. Use those paragraphs to craft your thesis and introduction. Once the introduction and body paragraphs are in place, move on to writing your conclusion. At that point, you are reading to proofread and to ensure that your MLA citations are in place. We’ll use this writing process each week, and the more you practice the process, the faster the process will become.In that case, your paragraph might look like this:main idea/definition cited in MLA formatquote from the literature to show that definition and main idea in actionanalysis to tease out the connections you’ve made with the main idea and evidencePlease note: you will need to cite your source in MLA format.
paragraph_plan__1_.docx
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Welcome, Everyone. I am glad you are here in this class. Together, we will explore and discover
the foundations of American literature. Along the way, you’ll likely learn a lot about our nation’s
history and the key cultural ideas and themes that dominate these early pieces of literature.
As you are likely aware, there is no textbook for this class; instead, you are learning with the
ideas that have been provided as part of the shareware movement. These sources are out of
copyright protection, of course, as they are, well, old! But we are also living in a time when
teachers and thinkers and scholars from around the world can gather together via the internet and
share unique ideas and resources that are only a click away.
In each week’s readings, you will notice there’s an overview, a list of outcomes, and series of
links to our readings (often in written and auditory form) and additional resources. Those are
your tools for this class. Therefore, you may not use or cite sources outside those provided in
this class class for your weekly discussions and midterm and final written exams.
How can we be so sure that you won’t need any more information? Well, the main goal of this
course is to offer some tools to help you read and understand the assigned literature, and from
there, you’ll be asked to write essays that express your reaction and opinion on key themes in the
weekly readings.
To accomplish this goal, we’ll use one basic format for structuring paragraphs. We call that
format the paragraph plan, and it contains three basic elements
main idea (also called the topic sentence of a paragraph–each paragraph has only one main idea
in academic writing)
cited evidence (quotes from the literature and/or facts cited from the additional resources–not:
all evidence must be cited in MLA format)
analysis (where you explain for the reader how and why the main idea and cited evidence fit
together to support your over-arching thesis, the point you’ll argue in answer to each of our
questions and essays in the class.
I realize this concept for writing paragraphs may be new to many of you, and that’s ok. We’ll
learn to master this format together. In fact, you won’t even use the format until week 2, and that
week 2 discussion is only worth 2 points. In week 3, after you’ve had feedback from me on your
week 2 work, the discussion is worth 4 points, and weeks 4 and 5 are also worth 4 points. In
week 6, you will write your midterm essays, and each is worth 10 points. The same rules apply
for those essays–no materials outside the class, and all facts and quotes must be cited in full
MLA format. But by the midterm, you’ll have practiced the format many times and grown in
your knowledge and understanding of the literature and this writing format. By the end of the
course, weeks 7, 8, and 9, you will be very experienced in this format and should find that the
process is actually faster and more efficient than the academic writing process you used before
this class.
So how do you get started in mastering this process?
You may have noticed that all of your discussion and essay questions for the entire term are
already posted. They are there for a reason. At the beginning of class, print or write down each
question–all of them–all the way through the final exam. Keep that list of questions at hand as
you read and take notes. When something occurs to you for one of the questions, jot it
down. This method saves time over the course, but it also allows you to learn the material and
spot key themes and quotes on your own terms. That’s a powerful learning process, and it’s one
we want to mine fully during our time together.
Once you have all of the questions ready to go, the next step involves taking notes. As you are
reading, jot down any key quotes or ideas that pop out to you.
**BE SURE TO LOCATE THE PAGE OR PARAGRAPH NUMBERS FOR ALL QUOTES
AND IDEAS SO THAT YOU CAN (1) FIND THEM LATER AND (2) CITE THEM
PROPERLY. ALL QUOTES REQUIRE A CITATION!
Once you have finished reading, return to your notes. Pull out any key quotes or facts you found
that relate to the discussion questions and plug them into our paragraph plan
main idea
cited evidence (plug in quotes here)
analysis
Now, at this point, you may note have the main ideas or analysis in sight. That’s ok. The point is
that you have read, taken notes, and completed a key step in the process–pulling out key quotes.
The next time you return to your work for this class, you will be poised and ready for the next
step–filling out the rest of the paragraph plan for 2-3 body paragraphs for the weekly discussions
and maybe 3-5 body paragraphs for the midterm and final exam essays.
Once you have the evidence in place, use the question you are writing about to guide your
critical thinking process through filling out the rest of the body paragraph–main idea and
analysis. You may discover that not all quotes work or that you need more evidence or that you
want to reorganize quotes. That’s great. Making changes are all signs of an active and engaged
critical learning process.
With the body paragraphs fairly well sketched out, you are ready to move to the introduction and
the conclusion. The introduction should start broad and narrow to a thesis statement, and that
thesis statement shows the reader your over-arching point, or the theme that your body
paragraphs will outline and evidence. Thus, you want to make sure your thesis foreshadows the
main ideas that your body paragraphs will evidence.
For the conclusion, you’ll want to restated what you just evidenced in those body paragraphs,
then maybe look ahead and offer a closing point or an idea for moving forward.
Note that these steps can be executed in any way that makes sense to you. Notice that one week,
you might see the thesis as soon as you get a few quotes in your notes, while for other weeks,
you might not finalize the thesis until the last hours of your process. Be flexible. Use these tools
as a guide to save time and to help you focus your efforts and ideas.
For more on writing academic essays, see
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/685/05/
For more on an additional tool for revision, see
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/689/1/
…
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